No. 103 Z-149 THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. TUESDAY. MAY 6. 1941 Price Three Centsniral John Downes Speaks Toying Maroons^’ On Air Armlutter of the wings of thelaroons”, a naval unit madeiversity of Chicago students>ard in Breasted Hall of theinstitute when Rear Admiral'nes, U.S.N. speaks on “Op-s in Naval Aviation” at 3:30I the program are talks byt Carl E. Olson, and Ensigntrensen. A moving picture,the Navy” will also be year course. They will be required topass a physical examination and therewill be two doctors at Billings Hospi¬tal today and tomorrow to give stu¬dents the examination. Ensign Soren¬sen will also have his office in Billingsand any students who desire furtherinformation on the possibilities of thetraining are invited to consult himthere.Admiral Downesnterviews StudentsSorensen will remain on thees for the remainder ofto interview interested stu-chief occupation will be tohe squadron of “Flying Ma-lich will be limited to ap-ty 50 members, and will un¬preliminary training as ae Glenview Naval Reservetase sometime next Septem-uccessful completion of thisy training the men will joinI other Big Ten schools atil Bases as Pensacola orle, Florida.Requirementsts for the course must havens for at least ten years,1 20 and 26 years of age,and have successfully corn-east half the work neces-degree in a regular four . . . speaks to "Flying Maroons"C U PresentsDavis EdwardsIn "Our Town"}gramMARY GRAHAMto improve the machinerym orientation. Women’sduring the winter quarterrvey of several hundredomen. Several of the sug-ich they made will be in-in the plans for orienta-11.i features of the wholeling to the survey werewith Chapel Union’s bamring closely. Other thingsjn like trailed on downances through teas, din-ajama party, the Presi-,ion, group luncheons, mu-tours to the DA play*B Unpopular—well!ey didn’t like were moreature. Surprisinglyiwing the general dislikeire the popularity leadinginners-up for the title ofThird complaint was thatIS going on at once. TheV down the rest of thewith inaudible speakers,dinners, and long speech-jcted to in that order,the Board will improve/eek by decreasing theunctions, giving the in-ips more leeway in plan-ley want to do by them-lidental with this will bein the individual respon-)up leaders who this yeariven their own freshmen,will plan the activities ofAn attempt will also beall group members intonitory.Many Activitiesimpus comment amongi about the same as thathe Federation survey ex-greatest objection seem-made to an overcrowdededule.ly Tuell, Foster resident“I thought it was tooidule. During freshmanopinion seemed to bee trying to kill us off inbead of doing it slowlymonths.” An oppositethat expressed by in-led on page four) Talent that few University dra¬matic groups can boast is beingplugged by Chapel Union’s infant the¬ater, The University Players, for theirsecond production, Thornton Wilder’sPulitzer Prize play, “Our Town.”Professor Davis Edwards in the roleof the Reader or Stage manager hashad previous experience with the playwhich makes him doubly qualified forthe important part he plays. He read“Our Town” to a Mandel Hall audi¬ence this summer with the FiftiethAnniversary Celebration, and in thesummer of 1936 made a similar read¬ing in New York for which he receivedfavorable press notices.Frank Grover, who is directing theproduction, and Bill Stryker, in one ofthe leading roles, worked on the sameplay when they were students at Lin-field College, Oregon.Several members of the cast, in¬cluding Lolly Chevlen, Gordon North¬rop, and Norma Evans are DAveterans of the past year.Presented in correlation with theUniversity’s Fiftieth Anniversary cel¬ebration, the play is scheduled forthe night of May 9th in Mandel Hall.It is the first entertainment feature onthe program of the Climaxus Week.Ellis Co-op ShowsMovies of European,Northern Co-opsMovies on co-operatives in NovaScotia and in Europe will be present¬ed tonight at 7 at the Ellis Co-op.These films, “The Lord Helps ThoseWho Help Each Other” and “A Trip toCo-operative Europe” are part of Hy¬man Minsky’s program as socio-edu-cational director of the co-op, whichinvites the campus to attend at a tencent admission charge.The first film traces the process bywhich Nova Scotia fishermen and mi¬ners, faced with unemployment andpoverty, partly solved their difficultiesby means of cooperative purchasing,marketing, and credit organizations,led by the parish priest. An accountof a trip made in 1936, under theauspices of the Co-operative League,to the leading co-operatives in Scot¬land, England, Scandinavia, and theSoviet Union is shown in the secondmovie. BanditsRob2 StudentsAt BeecherBob Buerki and Kay Lawson, Uni¬versity students, were robbed of theirwatches and cash by two armed ban¬dits in front of Beecher Hall at 11:16Sunday night.The robbers drove up behind thecouple as they were returning toBeecher Hall in Buerki’s car. Appar¬ently the bandits had been followingthem. One of the men leaped out ofthe car, shoved a gun in the window,and roughly ordered them to handover all of their valuables. Buerki toldthem to take his money but asked forhis wallet back, as it contained numer¬ous papers useful only to him. For areply, he was struck across the facewith the gun and told to “shut up.”Taken As HostageBuerki was then ordered into thecar as a hostage. He was drivenaround the block several times beforebeing released in front of the Book¬store.In the meantime. Miss Lawson not¬ed the license number of the car anddashed into Beecher to call the police.A squad arrived in five minutes, fol¬lowed soon after by the Campus Po¬lice, but the bandits had already ef¬fectively made their escape.Use Stolen CarThe Hyde Park Police reportedlater, the license number was that ofa stolen car. They are looking for thethieves, but neither of the studentswas able to give a clear descriptionof their two assailants.In commenting on her terrifying ex¬perience, Miss Lawson said, “I’m quitesure I wouldn’t be able to accuratelyidentify the robbers but they werehorrible.”Buerki, a D.U., suffered a slight cuton his chin from the blow the bandithad given him with his gun.Sponsor SecondFashion ShowBy SHIRLEE SMITHAnother luncheon and fashion showwill take place this Thursday, May 8,in the Sky Room of the Hotel Sherry.This is the second in a series of styleparades which are being sponsored byRussek’s Michigan Avenue store forwomen, and The Daily Maroon. Bever¬ly Ward will preside as commentatoron the latest outfits for college wom¬en.The clothes will again be modeledby University women selected fromthe various clubs on campus. The ten¬tative mannequins for this week areEleanor Hora, Alpha Epsilon, JoanLyding, Mortar Board, Ann Steeleand Dinny Butts, Sigmas, Beth Mahonand Betty Headland of Quadranglar,Peggy Flynn Self of Wyvern, andMike Rathje, Mortar Board.The show is scheduled to start at12:16 this week and will last approx¬imately one hour. The excellentluncheon which the Sherry serves isbut $.46, the entire cost of the oc¬casion, for the style show is put onfree through the courtesy of Russek’s.Despite the short notice of theevent, the first affair was a great sue-cess, and it is hoped it will be attend¬ed equally as well this week. Theluncheon checks will be made out in¬dividually this time to avoid the con¬gestion occasioned before.Thursday, May 16th, will be the lastof the shows, which have been verywell received.Tickets for the S.F.A.C. Weekendare now on sale at the Maroon Of¬fice and the Information desk.Prices for Our Tewn Friday, andThe Show of Shows Saturday are.36 to .76. The dance Saturday is.36. Two tickets for all events are$1.76. Add Four MembersTo Social CommitteeDink MacLellan. . . enlarges social committeeShow Of ShowsTo Go On RadioAnnouncesSFACAs a tribute to campus talent andthe SFAC, the outstanding skits andsongs from the “Show of Shows” areexpected to be aired over a Chicagoradio station, probably WGN, theweek following the show, Don Lever-idge. Weekend publicity chief, an¬nounced today.Since such popular stars as RuthWehlen, Ardis Molitor, John Crosby,Wilbur Jerger, Chuck Paltzer, EddieArmstrong and Sol Kamensky areslated for important parts in theshow, Leveridge was confident thatthe radio program would be very suc¬cessful.In conjunction with the U. of C.Radio Department, Ruth Wehlen willcirculate one of her records amongthe stations to give them a preview ofChicago’s brand of variety entertain¬ment.With Leveridge’s announcement ofthe radio show, came additional namesfor the “Most Dateable Girls on Cam¬pus” list. Among the new selecteeswere Peggy Zimmer, Ruth Apprich,Virginia Allen, Betta Hinkel, Gene¬vieve Hackett, Jane Claridge, JackieHoral, Barbara Foote, Betty Barry,Marge Rollins, Anne Haight, CarrollRussell, Janet Wagner, Shirley Lath¬am, Mary Ray, Helen Quissenberry,Jeanne Loughran, Marjorie Clemens,Bea Gaisig, Sorothy Styskal, LoisRegnell, Charlotte Ford, and LoisMerker.Reading ContestPrelims Begin TodayPreliminaries in the Florence JamesAdams Reading Contest will be heldin Bond Chapel today at 4. JohnBarnes, Merle Bergman, JosephineEwell Brynoon, Allan Dreyfuss, BettyAnn Evans, Grace Farjean, FlorenceB. Glaser, Richard Himmel, James R.Lawson, Sylvester Petro, and TomMurray White are the participants.Each will read a selection from non-dramatic poetry approved by the Eng¬lish Department. From the group notmore than six will be chosen to ap¬pear in the finals to be held a fewdays later.Established in 1912 this annual con¬test awards first, second, and thirdprize's of $76, $50, and $25. It is opento any undergraduate who has been inresidence over six quarters. Representatives of Indepen¬dent Groups to Have Voicein New Program.Under a new plan, the Student So¬cial Committee will next year be en¬larged to include four new memberschosen from independent groups,chairman Dink MacLellan announcedafter a Committee meeting Friday.According to the new regulation, thefour new members chosen will be therepresentatives of groups “definitelyorganized and which have a good sup¬porting membership.” The Circle,newly organized independent group.Chapel Union, the Ellis Co-op and theYMCA would be four groups fallingunder this category.In thus enlarging the membershipof the Committee, it is hoped thatlong-sought successful campus in¬tegration will become a reality.Transfers and GraduatesIt was also announced that a spe¬cial effort to form better connectionswith the transfer and graduate stu¬dents would be made next spring bythe 1941-2 Committee. The unsuccess¬ful attempts in other years to inte¬grate these units into the generalcampus scheme, was blamed for muchof the social disunity at the Univer¬sity.In a written statement. Miss Kid-well, faculty advisor to the StudentSocial Committee, said that the Com¬mittee had “struggled to promote asocial calendar acceptable to the wholecampus”. However, she admitted thatit had a difficult problem in that Chi¬cago is a large urban university withan unusually large graduate enroll¬ment.Need Independent BackingMiss Kidwell went on by sayingthat only with enough cooperationfrom all factions on the campus couldthe social program be successful andsatisfying to all. She stressed aboveall, the importance of independentbacking and warned that no programwould be complete without their fullapproval and cooperation.When contacted yesterday by theMaroon, MacLellan seemed optimisticof the Committee’s future and statedthat “the new plan will help to in¬tegrate the campus as a whole andwill give a social program to all whowant and need it.”Medical StudentsExempted fromMilitary ServiceIn a move designed to prevent ashortage of physicians, the SelectiveService System last Saturday ordereddeferment of military training formedical students who are reasonablycertain of becoming acceptable med¬ical doctors.The order was contained in a mem-oradum from Brigadier General LewisB. Hershey, Selective Seiwice deputydirector, to state and local boards.They were urged to make sure thatrequirements of the armed forces forphysicians and surgeons were filledwithout summoning to military dutypractising physicians whose servicesare necessary to the community.Need 9000 DoctorsCiting a recent survey by the Officeof Production Management estimatinga need of 9000 medical officers for thegovernment seiwices, Hershey saidthat to fill that need would removeabout five per cent of the doctors nowin civilian practice.Doctors and internes eligible formilitary service were urged to applyfor medical reserve corps commis¬sions. Internes thus commissionedwould be deferred from active duty tocomplete one year’s interneship. Oth¬ers would remain eligible for con¬scription.Page Two THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. MAY 6. 1941VolLcf 'THjoAoonFOUNDED IN 1902The Daily Maroon is the official student newspaper of the Uni¬versity of Chicago, published mornings except Saturday, Sunday,and Monday during the Autumn, Winter, and Spring quarters byThe Daily Maroon Company, 6881 University avenue. Telephones:Hyde Park 9222.After 6:80 phone in stories to our printers. The Chief PrintingCompany, 148 West 62nd street. Telephones: Wentworth 6128 and6124.The University of Chicago assumes no responsibility for anystatements appearing in The Daily Maroon, or for any contractentered into by The Daily Maroon.The Daily Maroon expressly reserves the rights of publication ofany material appearing in this paper. Subscription rates: $3 a year$4 by mail. Single copies: three cents.Entered as second class matter March 18, 1908, at the post officeat Chicago, Illinois, under the act of March 3, 1879.MemberAssociated Collegiate PressDistributor ofCollegiate DigestBOARD OF CONTROLEditorialWILLIAM HANKLA PEARL C. RUBINSERNEST S. LEISER JOHN P. STEVENS, ChairmanBUSINESSROBERT P. O’DONNELL, Bus. Mgr.ROBERT HIGHMAN, Adv. Mgr.EDITORIAL AS80CUTESJames Burtle, Mark Fisher, Richard Himmel, Robert Lawson,Daniel Mezlay, Richard Philbrick, Robert D. F. Reynolds, andDaniel Winograd.BUSINESS ASSOCIATESCHESTER SMITH, CirculationELLEN TUTTLE, Office Mgr.Richard Bolks, Wm. Van Horn. Myles Jarrow, Robert Pregler,Edward L. RaehlinNight Editor: Stuart SchulbergHypocritical Turn-coatsThis University has in theory a very en¬lightened athletic policy of sports for sport'ssake alone. Students here say that they defin¬itely favor such a policy. Words are easy things,however, and their actions certainly belie theirstatements.The baseball team is having tough going.Any dispassionate observer would immediatelysay that here, then, is a good spot for the stu¬dent body to show that they do believe in sucha policy. That is just what does not happen.Disparaging SpectatorsThere are poor turnouts at the games, and. / most of the spectators that do come leave early.The team is talked of as disparagingly as wasthe basketball team. The students certainlyshow themselves to be hypocritical turn-coatsfor the most part.The Varsity C-club has been trying to or¬ganize some sort of student support of athleticsand has worked hard at its self-appointed task.It is certainly not getting any cooperation fromthe student body as a whole, however. Thereis an almost infinitesimal amount of schoolspirit surrounding the athletic teams here.Those who do show any are certainly flying inthe faces of their fellows.It's a strange thing also that those who arethe quickest to take up the cudgel with some¬one who upholds subsidization or any otherform of “unclean" athletics are also the first toshoot their mouths off about how bad the teamsare. They are also the ones who make no moveto help but are content to merely sit back andcarp. It would present an interesting sight forthem to report for any of the sports.Team Deserves SupportIt certainly seems to us that the baseballteam right now deserves the whole-hearted sup¬port of the University. The quality of the gameit plays, its record, its opponents, should cer¬tainly not matter. 'The team stands as the rep¬resentative of a theory of athletics. To denythem is to deny the policy.'This has been a troublesome year for Uni¬versity athletic teams in general. It seems to usthat the students in withdrawing for all prac¬tical purposes their support for the teams haveindicated a desire for a different athletic pro¬gram. We don't think that they want such achange, but from here on in the burden of proofmust rest with them. R. H. L.Today on QuadranglesTUESDAY, MAY 6Exhibition: “Contemporary Art in the Countriesof the Western Hemisphere,” Goodspeed 108, 9-12, 2-5.Worship Service, Bond Chapel, 11:65.University Tennis Match: Western State vs. Chicago,2:30.Lecture: “Individual Behavior Viewed from theStandpoint of Personal Values,” Asahel Woodruff, So¬cial Science 122, 4:30.Graduate Club of Economics and Business: “Rela¬tions of Ethics to Social Science,” John Nef, HaskellCommon Room, 7:30.Reynolds Club Duplicate Bridge Tournament: Reyn¬olds Club, 7. The Traveling Bazaar Elect Meyer HeadOf Calvert Club The new secretary is GeraldineWouters, while Sam Clark will serveas treasurer. Jack Farrell is in chargeof the membership committee.By BETTY VAN LIEWWhat is so rare as a day in May?Most people fritter their lives away.At any rate all those things all those people weredoing last weekend aren’t what you’d call studying.Ed (Smooth boy) Armstrong, for instance, wasn’t doingmuch of anything at the Phi Psi party, Friday, but hetried to sing. He did well in a duet with Marge Exeter—but his solo was sad— Jim Hoatson was dancing aroundwithout any shoes. They say he’s buying a new car andcan’t afford them. John White and Milt Weiss had a lotof fun wolfing. So did Bill Hankla, Joe Molkup, and AlDreyfus, whom they say don’t date because they can’tfind anyone on their intellectual level. Bob Highmanwas there with Eleanor Hora, who is only a sophomorebut still the president of Alpha Epsilon.At the last night of Blackfriars. .. the show was full of adliberties. Dan Barnes got ina good plug for the Club Elgin, which is a taxi-dancein Argo. John Crosby did pretty well too, but the bestcrack came from Bob Miller after he had begun hisdescent from heaven three times and had to wait forthe Ballet-boys to leap around the stage a few moretimes to the demands and delight of the audience. Theyhad to do the whole ballet over finally and then whenBob finally floated down he stopped the show saying,“Is the ballet over?”But the Blackfriars really had their fun though whenthe show ended and they escorted Frank Etherton in hisslinky blue lounging pajamas to the edge of the BotanyPond. He did an informal strip-tease and stole the gloryby jumping in. Almost as amusing was the speed withwhich Mush Blumenthal and his pals ran to avoid asimilar cooling off. You know what mob psychology doesto crowds around the Botany Pond.Open parties bloomed... all over the place Saturday night. The Phi Deltahad their beach party. What you could see of it wasgood, but you had to carry a flashlight. John (Whizz-bang) Bex looked like a good beachcomber. John Angelo,Dick Blakesly and a million others may have looked likegood beachcombers too, but it was too dark to tell.Everyone wore leis and when those at Phi Delt Houseran out, party-goers improvised rather straggly onesfrom the Christmas decorations at the Kappa SigmaHouse where beautiful Marge Exeter was singing sooth¬ing things while masses of humanity made a vainattempt at Dancing in the Dark. The Esquires werecompressed in a cubicle but they couldn’t complain, sowas everyone else.The University Housing Co-op. . . had an informal pahty too.They had a broadcast of the March of Freud.Joe Levinger played records of the Spanish War.George Blackwood, bartender, sold drinks at the newlow of ten cents per shot. (You try to combine Freud,The Spanish War and ten-cent drinks in one short para¬graph.)Green punch that tasted green made the B. J. springformal springlike. Happy and Happy Van de Water(well, aren’t they) watched like god-parents over theaffair. Doris Daniels was with Bud Steinbach and sisterFlorence with Beeno Marchello.The S.F.A.C. Weekend... is getting lots of publicity, what with The Mortar¬boards being busy being the most datable girls on cam¬pus and the Quads claiming distinction for being themost undatable. What it really needs are ticket sales.O’Donnell is tearing his heart out and wearing his legsout all for the University. (He might be trying to flunkhis physical exam.)Come NoW/ Socrates!A Letter to the EditorBoard of Control,The Daily Maroon;The article by Mr. Milton Mayer which you repub¬lished today seems to me just one more painful exampleof the wishful thinking and avoidance of cold, hard factswhich is all too characteristic of our present predica¬ment. The profound truth which Socrates, according toMr. Mayer, is supposed to have made clear to Mr. Jonesis utterly commonplace. If Mr. Mayer’s memory is aslong as mine, he will recall that it is thirty years sincethe nations of Europe took corporate steps toward re¬moving those “oily rags”. That they didn’t work at ithard enough is perfectly apparent but that they wereconscious of the situation shows the futility of Mr. May¬er’s whole discussion. His little parable is completelyconfused, because of the following facts:1. Jones’ house has not yet burned down; the fire isstill raging. It is no time for him to stop and talkphilosophy with Socrates. The supreme fact is that thehouse is on fire and something must be done about it.2. Socrates cannot be so indifferent, because his ownhouse is close next door; in fact, an extension of Jones’building is right up against his. By the time Jones’house has burned down, Socrates is going to be in abad way.3. Those “rags” would probably have been com¬pletely carried out before this if Socrates himself hadn’trefused to cooperate. Sincerely yours,W. A. Irwin Bob Meyer, political science stu¬dent, was elected president of the Cal¬vert Club at the Club’s spring outinglast weekend. Other officers, chosenfor their interest in the organizationthis year, were announced at the sametime. KEN47th-KimbarkKenwood 6000 I5c 6 fo 6:3025c AfterTodayThe Philadelphia StorywithKATHERINE HEPBURNJAMES STEWART CARY GRANTendLand of LibertyTomorrow end Thursday“It Tops Night Train"BLACKOUTandReturn engagement by popular demandMy Favorite WifewithCARY GRANT - IRENE DUNNEFREE PARKINGIn the springtime and in the summer the Root GardenBallroom of the Sherry with its outdoor promenade andbalcony overlooking the lake and the park is just aboutthe most delightful spot in town for Luncheons, Tea-Parties,Dinners, Dances, Receptions, Weddings, Coming OutParties, Club, Sorority and Fraternity affairs.The food is excellent andthe prices ore reosonohle.HOTEL SHERRYFifty-third Street at the Lake CHICAGONext Sunday, May 11th isMOTHER'S DAYGIFT SUGGESTIONSSummer Candies—attractively boxedColognes and Perfumes ■Summer JewelryBlock Printed Table LinensHosiery and HandkerchiefsNew Pastel StationeryMOTHER'S DAYGREETING CAROSBOOKS FOR ALL TASTESON ALL SUBJECTSFICTION BIOGRAPHY RELIGIONADVENTURE TRAVELART MUSIC POETRYART PRINTSU.ofC. Bookstore5802 EllisTHE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY. MAY 6. 1941Delta Sigma announces thepledging of Marjorie Clemens ofChicago.TEN.NIS RACKETS»!■“ to >1750Rackth of all loading manufacturers.Balls. Prettes, and all accessories.Shoirts. SoK. Shirts, Shoes, etc.COMPLETE RESTRIN0IN6 SERVICEWOODWORTH'S Jt^o^e1311 E. S7th St. Open Evenings Lineberger LeadsIn Cap & Gown TripTo Mexico ContestBY DICK HIMMELAnd you sit up and find your bed inthe middle of State Street and all thebedclothes are gone and you remem¬ber that you don't have any paiamason because of the heat and then younotice that a big crowd of people isgathered around and staring and Star¬ing and STARINGI Ever have a night¬mare like this one ... so common topeople who sleep in the raw?So what do you do? You can'tcrawl under the bed, you can't hideunder the mattress, you think you'regoing to have to stand there foreverwhile people stare, and Stare andSTARE.BUT WAITI Did you say StateStreet—on the South End of the Loop?Well then, just rush out of bed, fightthrough the throng, escape the howlingmob and diva into THE HUB. Run tothe main floor, dive around the cornerand say breathlessly to the clerk."(pant, pant) Give me a pair ofthose short (pant, pant) pajama out¬fits. You know—the ones that don'tbind your belly, that don't climbaround your neck, that are light, cooland air conditioned, (pant, pant)""Oh," says the enthusiastic HUBclerk, "do you mean our new MinoPajamas that sell for only $2.50? Wesell a great many of these.And neit time you wake up in themiddle of State Street at high noonand you don't have any covers andthere's a Great Big CROWD just standup in bed and say "Seaeeeeee ... Ibought these at the HUBI"the i HubC^C'*x\4f C, jCifttirH £ ^cr>v\.''taU ..'.I,/ CHIC \C.O DICK MERRIFIELD DICK SALZMANNNewest contestants for Cap and Gown’s offer of a week’s sojourn in exoticMexico are Dick Salzmann, sponsored by Psi Upsilon, Dick Merrifield, thecandidate of Alpha Delta Phi and Sidney Be-Hannessey who has the supportof the Law School behind him.Leader in the contest to pick the most popular man on campus is nowDKE Bob Lineberger but Psi U Salzmann and Phi Psi, Bob Highman arethe runners-up. However, Cap and Gown Business manager Jack Crane de¬clared yesterday that the contest is still wide open for a dark horse, with anygroup able to garner 25 subscription votes almost assured of victory.Sigma beauty Beverly Glenn, is now ahead in the balloting for the mostpopular woman but Esoteric Doris Daniels, and Quadrangler, Joan Duncanare giving her a close race. The winners of the contest will spend a week inMexicd following the close of school in June with all expenses paid.This year’s Fiftieth Anniversary Cap and Gown which is sponsoring theMexican contest will be the most expensive one ever put out, costing a thou¬sand dollars more than the 1940 yearbook. A large part of the book will bein color and as a special Anniversary feature, a history of the Universityduring its first fifty years will be given.Open Flower FestivalAt Mill Road May 17At the peak of spring blossomingtime. Mill Road Gardens, 480 acreLake Forest estate given to the Uni¬versity by Albert D. Lasker, will beopened to t h e public for a SpringFlower Festival from May 17 to June1. In consultation with the botany de¬partment of the University, arrange¬ments have been made for the publicto view the 20,908,800 feet of land-Well Gives NextWalgreen TalkSpeaking on the relation of laborto national unity, Mathew Woll, in¬ternationally famous union executive,will deliver the sixth Walgreen Foun¬dation lecture in Mandel Wednesdaynight at 8:30.ELSNER-ANALYSTAuthor of "High-Speed Typewriting"TYPING & SHORTHAND INSTRUCTIONSPEED BUILDINGBy app't 1245 Byron Buc. 0079WHEN YOU GO TO COLLEGETHIS FALLTako €idvantageof tho "College Spetiol'^ROUNp TRIPREDUCED FARESThst* tpsclol school and coIIoqo roll tickols, with their liberal ex-Nnded return limits, ore Immensely popular with students and teach¬ers. When you ore ready to go to school this Foil, buy one. You mayuse the return coupon to travel home at Christmas. There ore alsoreduced round trip Pullman rotes in connection with these "CollegeSpecial” tickets. The ticket agent In your own home town, or anyrailroad pouenger representative con give you full details regard¬ing return limits, stop over privileges, prices, etc.Be Thrifty and Safe—Travel by TrainASSOCIATED EASTERN RAILROADS scaped grounds and gardens whichsurround the imposing French pro¬vincial manor house.Among the major attractions of theMill Road Gardens Flower Festivalwill be the display of tulips, giantpansies, and wild flowers, flanked byrows of blossoming apple and peartrees. Visitors will also have the op¬portunity to visit the estate’s uniquetopiary garden, the greenhouses, andthe South Vista which stretches to theoutdoor swimming pool and beyond tothe dove cote.Manor House OpenThe manor house, with its vast col¬lection of antique furniture, and therecreation building with its completetheatre with movie and sound equip¬ment will be open for public inspec¬tion for the first time.There will be an admission chargeto the festival of 50 cents for adultsand 26 cents for children, with a sim¬ilar additional charge for inspectionof the manor house.American FolkDances GivenAt Field HouseLloyd Shaw, authority on Americanfolk dances, is giving a demonstrationat 8:30 in the Fieldhouse today. Shawhas a new summer school of dancingin Colorado and is bringing hisschool children and their own own or¬chestra.The evening is sponsored by theChicago Park District and the Univer¬sity. There will be four parts to thedemonstration, “Dances of Grand¬mother’s Day,” “The Barn Dance,”“Dances of Our Southwest,” and“Cowboy Dances.” In all there will beabout 30 numbers.Dr. Shaw’s traditional folk danceshave spread from New York to Cali¬fornia, from Dallas to Detroit and atpresent he and his troupe are on tourof eight eastern states appearing be¬fore physical education and collegeorganizations. He has published abook on cowboy dances which tells allwith complete “calls”, photographs,and diagrams.Tickets are available at Ida Noyes.Student price 20c, geneial admission,44c. Page ThreeClassifiedTO SELL—Flowera. pipe* and tobacco, andhotel entertainment duebills at slashedprices to liquidate accumulated assets. SeeEllen Tuttle, Office ManaKer, Daily Ma¬roon business office—Lexington Hall.SPECIAL — Edgewater Beach Duebills 20%off. Call at Business office Daily Maroon,Lex. Hall.SELL, RENT — 0 room famished honae —GRAND BEACH—on a golf course, fur¬nace, fireplace. Write Mrs. Franklin Hess:Sandwich, HULOST—Ring—Springfield College 1939, set withgarnet with name, "Menge" in band. Re¬ward. Call Menge, Snell 14. COLLEGE WOMENWANTED!CoLLEOx women, with good•ducational backgrounds plusprofessional secretarial andbusiness training, are in de-■umd for important positions.Investigate now The CareerInstitute’s modem methodsthat lead to interesting busi¬ness and professional careers.UOBTKATION DATESSuiosKR Quabter . . . Jon 90Faix Quabtxb Sept. 29Writ* for Free Booklet"Careers"INSTITUTETSW MorMi StlrMaaa Avmm, ■>•»«. SI, Cl»lc«e«ANNUAL MAY SALE-BOOKS-Hundreds of Titles at a Fraction of Original Cost—Philosophy - Psychology - History - Economics - BusinessDrama - Poetry - Fiction - Children's BooksGeneral Titles—Buy during this sole and save!TENNIS ■ TYPEWRITERS - STATIONERYUIOODUIORTH’SBOOK1311 E. 57th St. STOREOpen EveningsFOURSOME4ACKET • WAISTCOAT • TROUSERS • SLACKS35COMPLETESMART • PRACTICAL • ECONOMICALStyled by Finchley in the brisk and gracefulmanner essential to garments destined for cor-'rect but vigorous weekend and country usageor rugged campus wear. The jacket, trousersand waistcoat can be had in fine, durable,handsome tweed or shedand, in herringbone,diagonal or mixed patterns. Browns, tans,blues, bvat green and other cheerful, newtones. The slacks are made of gabardine toharmonize or to contrast with the other units.19 East Jackson Boulevard, Chicago564 Fifth Avenue, New York • Phipp* Plaza, Palm BeachPage Four THE DAILY MAROON. TUESDAY, MAY 6. 1941Ball Team Drops TtooGames To IllinoisCoupling a devastating attack witha weak Chicago defense, Illinois tooktwo ball games from the Maroons,winning Friday, 22 to 4, and Saturday,16 to 3.Three home runs and eight Chicagoerrors gave Captain Alan Grant afairly easy afternoon in the firstgame. They scored seven runs in thethird and eight in the seventh.Meyer StartsBob Meyer started for Chicago butwas removed in the third for KenGarverick. Rodney Briggs and CarlNohl also saw action on the mound.Big gun in the winners’ attack Fri¬day was first-baseman Paul Milose-vich, also a football player. He ham¬mered out two home runs, one drop¬ping over the fence on UniversityAvenue. He also collected three hitsSaturday.The second game was even more ofa walk-away as the visitors piled up14 runs before any Maroons hadcrossed the plate. Captain Art Lopat-ka started, but the combination of theIllinois hitting and the Chicago field¬ing proved too much for him as hegave way to Johnny Beeks in the sev¬enth.Drish PitchesJohnny Drish of basketball famestarted for the winners, then movedback to his right-field position whenthe lead looked fairly secure. EdSchiller and Bob Finn shared the re¬mainder of the work.The Maroon batters were putty inthe hands of the four Illini pitchers,getting six hits Friday and three Sat¬urday. Despite this the team’s averagerose to the robust mark of .179.aOOD FOOD, WELL COOKEDk Dlansr worth •oviry night for T5e.Tonight—Roast log of lambTnosday—Chiekon pioPHONI HYOI PARK 4324HOMEY, ROOMY, AIRY FUR¬NISHED COTTAGE—attractivelylocated on wooded knoll borderinggolf course and 300 yds. from LakeMichigan. All utilities: double gar¬age; commuting distance fromcampus. Bargain—Rent or Sale. In¬quire P.O. Grand Beach, Mich.4 MONTH INTENSIVE COURSEfOR COLLEGE STUDENTS AND GRADUATESA thorough, tnlettsive, stenographic course—starting January 1, April 1, July 1, October 1.Interesting Booklet sent free, without obligatum— write or phone. No solicitors employed,m ose rbusiness collegePAUL MOSER, J.D.,PH.#.Re^lar Courses for Beginners, open to HighSchool Graduates only, start first Mondayof each month. Advanced Courses startany Monday. Day and Evening. EveningCourses open to men.116 S. Michigan Av«., Chicago, Randolph 4347 l-M ResultsPhi Sigma Delta, 11; Beta ThetaPi, 1Psi U “B”, 13; Alpha.Delt “B” 12Sigma Chi, 7; Psi U, 6Kappa Sigma, 14; Phi Kappa Psi, 7Delta Upsilon, 27; Chi Psi, 6FridayDeke “B”, 20; Beta Theta Pi, 9Circle, 21; Bar Ass’n “B”, 4Jailbird, 26; Grad Math, 4Netters FaceWestern StateWith one eye turned anxiously toNorthwestern University, in Evan¬ston, where their future may be decid¬ed by the triangular week-end seriesbetween the Wildcats, Ohio State andMichigan, Chicago’s tennis Maroonsreserve the other eye for use againstWestern state, here today, at 2:30.The Western State coach, FrankHouseholder, brings another strongteam to the Midway, with Frank Rus¬sel, Don Crock, John Vandermeiden,Bill Taylor, Rolan Fend, Dick Spenceror Joel Gilbert lined up to face theLocals. The Bronco’s lost the annualtilt last year by a 7-2 count.Ray Paces ChicagoTracksters to 76-46Win Over WaynePaced by Captain Jim Ray, Chi¬cago’s thinclads won the second trackmeet of the quarter Saturday, whenthey defeated Wayne 76-46 on StaggField.Ray took first in the broad jumpand the high and low hurdles andplaced second in the high jump toclaim undisputed title of outstandingathlete of the meet. In bettering 47ft. to take first in the shot put, Ren-dleman showed that he was once morein form and proved that great thingsmay be expected of him in futuremeets.In other events. Marrow won the100, running it in 10.1, Kassius jumped6 ft. 1 in. to take the high jump andRandall succeeded in winning both thehalf-mile and the mile, with Leggitplacing first in the two-mile run. Inwinning his events, Ray ran the highhurdles in 15.6, the low hurdles in25.5 and jumped 22 ft. 6 in. in thebroad jump.Program—(Continued from page one)dependent Catherine Morrison, whosaid she thought the week was “verywell planned. If you attended all thefunctions you were too busy to gethomesick.’’Most women however shared MissTuell’s opinion. Mortar Board, SybilFerriter, Delta Sigma, Helen Reevesand independent, Florette L o b e 1agreed in saying that the week wasso filled with activities, it gave themno time to themselves. IndependentIda Indritz, expressed the opinion ofseveral freshmen when she said theweek “gives you the idea of collegelife that you get in the movies.”Most radical and the only disap¬proving comment was that given byan anonymous freshman who said, “Itwas a hell of a mess. It wasn’t wellorganized.”Yellow BantamRental Library1460 E. 57tli St. (Shop in Lobby)Open to 9 P. M.New Mysteries, Novels, etc.yUjJSMORGASBORDDoes your mouth water at the sound of thatword?Satisfy that craving at the Dining Room whereSMORGASBORD is served at its best.Miss Lindquist's Dining RoomI 5540 HYDE PARK BLVD. In the Broadview Hotel*^*^^**'‘^******^*"*»»**R'f*'R'R»»'vv^m'ssssiBS¥S'S'syBsmssssss'SBssisvseii'W> Coprngbt 1941, UccsTT 4 Mtsu Touooo C*.OKANTUND RICK Right from the tee-off/ you’// like theirCOOLER, MILDER, BETTER TASTESmokers get every good qualitythey like in Chesterfield’s famous blend.This right combination of the best tobac¬cos that grow in our own Southlandand that we bring from far-oflf Turkeyand Greece truly SATISFIES.Make your next packChesterfield,. .you can*tteam-up with a bettercigarette. Everybody whosmokes them likes them,tVERYWHeRi YOU GOSAMSNEADJUOMcSRAOINIDOUVIRIV/r// THE GOLEE/^S^/ChesterfieldMaroonNet TeamDefeats C^phers^Hawkeyesin Week-end JunketIn continued and ever increasingproficiency, the traveling Maroon ten¬nis army favored the teams of thehost Universities of Iowa and Minne¬sota, respectively, to a savage week¬end exhibition of the finer points ofthe net sports as they treated Iowato an 8-1 lashing; before dispatchingof the Gophers, Saturday, by a 7-2 ex¬ecution. Coach Wally Hebert’s sav¬ages mercilessly beat down the feebleHawkeyes at every turn, with only thelast doubles match writ down as aconsolation crumb for the Hawk duoof Karl Ryerson and Charles Marsh¬all. But the Gophers were not soquickly resigned to their fate, andthey took the Number Three matchesin both the singles and doublesmatches.Cal Shows HowIn the Friday slaughter, CaptainCal Sawyier showed the Maroon’s justhow a neat rout is inaugurated, witha 6-0, 6-3 victory over A1 Butterworth,the uncertain Iowa sophomore. WallyKemetick, facing the best of the Iowafodder in John Parks, also made shortwork of his man in a 6-3, 7-5 smashwin. But Bill Self, the sophomoreNumber Three man, had the best timeof all when he finished Earl Crain’safternoon in fast 6-0, 6-0 sets.Bud Lifton prolonged his match tothree sets with crucial mistakes, butfinally bested Ryerson 3-6, 6-1, 6-2.Jim Hill won, 6-3, 6-2, from Marshall,of Iowa, and Grover Daly ended theHawkeye singles agony with a 2-6,6-1, 7-5 sloth-like performance overLouis Wurl, the Iowa Six place oc¬cupant. The doubles matches gave theHawks their only good mark, withSelf and Daly bowing to Ryerson andMarshall, 4-6, 6-2, 8-6. Sawyier andLifton needed only two sets, 6-1, 6-3,to beat down Parks and Crain, andKemetick paired with Hill to out-playButterworth and Wurl in three longsets; 4-6, 6-2, 7-5.Minnesota StubbornMinnesota presented a more stub¬born front, with a team that is ofWisconsin’s caliber. Sawyier took hisfourth straight conference singlesmatch when he easily distanced Olsen,the Gopher leader, 6-0, 7-5. Kemeticknotched another win in his matchagainst Liberman, with a 7-5, 6-3 tab¬ulation, and Self made it threestraight with a 8-6, 7-5 win overGranahoplis.Bud Lifton, however, varied theprocedure by losing to Nosek in two6-3, 6-3 sets. Hill came bacE tostraighten the enlivened Gohpers out,as he defeated Moore 6-1, 5-7, 8-6.Daly again mopped up the singles di¬vision, with a 6-2, 6-2 nod over Silgen,the Minnesota end man.Repeating their performance inIowa the combine of Self and Dalydrooped the ball with less abandonthan Liberman and Silgen, so theylost once again; 7-6, 6-2. As usual,Sawyier and Lifton were happy witha 4-6, 6-3, 9-7 triumph over Grana¬hoplis and Nosek, and the KemetickHill enterprize flourished against Ol¬sen and Moore to the extent of aweary 6-4, 6-7, 6-0 margin. Michigan HoldsLeague Lead 'BIG TEN STANDINGSTeam W. L. G.B. Pet.1. Michigan 0 1.0002. Northwestern 1 1 .7608. Illinois 2 .7144. Indiana 3 1 .6266. Minnesota 3 2 .6006. Ohio State 3 2 .6007. Iowa 2 2 .6008. Wisconsin 2 .3839. Purdue 6 4 .16710. CHICAGO 6 5 .000Pridsy’s RMaltaIllinois 22-CHICAGO 4Ifichisran 13 —Ohio State 6Indiana 10—Purdue 1Minnesota 4—Iowa 8Saturday’s ResultsIliinois 16—CHICAGO 3Michigan 16—Ohio State 8Indiana 7—Purdue 6Minnesota 8—Iowa 2Illinois, Michigan, Indiana and Min¬nesota came through with double vic¬tories in conference play over the lastweekend.Northwestern and Wisconsin playedin non-conference tilts. The Purpletook two games from the Notre Damenine by scores of 6-6 and 6-1. TheCardinals split two games with Michi¬gan State losing the opener 2>1 andcoming back with a 3-2 victory onSaturday.FOR SALE1934 Chevrolet RoadsterOwner— Army BoundCall Fair. 0592 Evenings